Glacier failure on Mt. Shasta causes flash flooding, mud slides.

From what I know of the area, this is probably due to weakening from the sun/drought and not volcanically triggered. Seismicity has been fairly quiet
around Mt. Shasta for a while. But the volcano is inherently crumbly, due to heat, gases.

Currently, water is backing up behind the debris flow and could burst downstream at any time.

* AT 443 AM PDT...A GLACIER ON MT SHASTA HAS BROKEN...RELEASING
LARGE QUANTITIES OF MUD...ROCKS AND WATER. THIS IS CAUSING
FLASH FLOODING IN MUD CREEK AND PILGRIM CREEK.

* LAW ENFORCEMENT REPORTS THAT FLOODING IS OCCURRING AT THE
FOLLOWING ROADS: FOREST SERVICE ROAD 31 KNOWN AS WINDING WAY AND
FOREST SERVICE ROAD 13 KNOWN AS PILGRIM CREEK ROAD. BOTH ROADS
ARE CLOSED.
Instructions: FLOOD WATERS ARE MOVING DOWN MUD CREEK AND PILGRIM CREEK FROM MID WAY UP MOUNT SHASTA TO JUST NORTH OF HIGHWAY 89 WHERE WATERS ARE
CURRENTLY DAMMED. WATER CONTINUES TO ACCUMULATE UPSTREAM BEHIND THE DEBRIS FLOW AND MAY BREAK FREE AND FLOW DOWNSTREAM AT ANY TIME. A FLASH FLOOD
WARNING MEANS FLASH FLOODING IS OCCURRING OR IS IMMINENT. MOST FLOOD RELATED DEATHS OCCUR IN AUTOMOBILES. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CROSS WATER COVERED
BRIDGES...DIPS...OR LOW WATER CROSSINGS. NEVER TRY TO CROSS A FLOWING STREAM... EVEN A SMALL ONE... ON FOOT. TO ESCAPE RISING WATER MOVE UP TO HIGHER
GROUND.
Target Area:
Siskiyou

This is probably unrelated, but there was a relatively deep Mag 3.1
just off the coast of Eureka, CA (and WSW of Mt. Shasta by about 200 kms) 30 minutes prior to the slide.
On Mt. Shasta proper, the most recent quake was this microscopic Mag
0.6 on the 19th, NE of the summit and 7 kms deep. Hardly big enough to break a glacier.

The US Forest Service is speculating about the drought weakening the glacier.

Shasta-Trinity National Forest wilderness rangers believe the mudslide may be related to the drought, which has left Mt. Shasta’s glaciers
exposed to the sun’s heat.

Damn, if you were my wife, you'd have a $3k computer of your very own, a 50"+ display, the fastest net connection available, and a 200.00/month
allowance for paid scientific journal/document readings. What the heck is he thinking? How dare he stifle one of the best minds on this site!

Global warming has been affecting the US for a while now and this is another sign of it, but unfortunately most people will continue to ignore reality
and realistically it's probably too late to stop it now.

This year there is barely any snow capping Shasta's peak. In recent years the cap has receded.
This is surely a cause of warmer temperatures and a persistent drought.
If you look at the picture in the OP, you see there is virtually no snowpack, with the exception of the glaciers.
With no snowpack to cover the glaciers, the "bare roots' of the glaciers , essentially, are exposed to the continuing sun.
Without the protection of snow and ice, they break off and slide.
I, recall so many past years, that the snow held to the mountaintop throughout summer, just pulling up throughout August; by this time of year-
storms and accumulation of high altitude snow had already begun.

I completely agree with you. It wasn't that long ago either.
When I was living in the area, in the '90s, the mountain always had snow covering the glaciers and at least the top 1/5 of edifice in mid summer.

Inciweb has added the Mt. Shasta mud flow to their page. So now we can watch the west burn and
follow the flooding all in one place.

I have always been interested in Mt Shasta after finding out the government sealed it to keep Geronimo from using it as a quick tunnel from California
to I believe it was New Mexico.

These lands for a lot of tribes is sacred ground. For some, Mt. Shasta presented the hollow earth theory, for the tribes various opinions but all
sacred. The sealing of it has always had me interested since reading about it in school; there was really no big justification for it outside of
getting the "enemy"; after he was caught it was allegedly never reopened.

I wonder what are the conditions going on inside of it. When I lived in Frisco, there was a lot of talk about jobs down there mining into it, and
that was back in the 90s. If they did mine in there, I wonder is that also contributing to the problem.

I completely agree with you. It wasn't that long ago either.
When I was living in the area, in the '90s, the mountain always had snow covering the glaciers and at least the top 1/5 of edifice in mid summer.

This is the true, and snow would remain at the the top until the following seasonal snows. This year, by about June, there was no snow left on the
mountain.

This site documents a similar glacial melt from Mt. Shasta back in 1924.
I'm curious to see if we have a similar chain of events. Link

The 1924 mud flow from Konwakiton Glacier made front page news in the Redding Courier-Free Press six times during the months of August and
September. The first article covering the story in this newspaper, on the front page, was:

BREAKING UP OF GLACIER AT TOP OF MT. SHASTA MUDDIES WATER Water of River Muddiest It Has Ever Been Roads Washed Out by Rush of Water Down Mountain
(By the Associated Press) SACRAMENTO, Aug. 18

A veritable river of mud, boulders and ashes extending in width from a few hundred yards to half mile, in some places fifteen to 20 feet deep, is
flowing from the mouth of Mud Creek canyon, eight miles above McCloud, on the slope of Mount Shasta, into the McCloud river, says a dispatch to the
Sacramento Bee. The sudden flood is attributed by old residents to a sudden break up of the glacier exposed to sun's rays at the top of an extinct
volcano. McCloud's water pipes were broken for two days. The water of the Sacramento river was the muddiest it has been for years...

Devastating back then, and they got a cold spell in the middle of September that helped slow the mud flow.

SACRAMENTO, Sept. 19
Freezing temperatures at the base of Mount Shasta early today checked the stupendous flow of ashes, mud and lava formation, which poured down the
sides of the mountain before a torrent of flood waters, imperilling the lumber town of McCloud, five miles distant.

Interesting series of events if you read through them all.
Well if the heat continues like it has we may see an increase in frequency of mudflows like these.

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.